Disruptors for GOOD | Social Entrepreneurs and Social Enterprises

Disruptors for GOOD is a podcast that showcases global social entrepreneurship and social enterprises committed to ethical fashion, impact investing, climate mitigation, sustainable travel, and businesses generating positive global impact. Through in-depth interviews, Grant Trahant, the founder of Causeartist, engages with innovative and impactful startups and brands worldwide.

  1. Andrew Sweet, VP of Innovation at The Rockefeller Foundation + New Show Announcement:  Intelligence for GOOD

    4 days ago ·  Bonus

    Andrew Sweet, VP of Innovation at The Rockefeller Foundation + New Show Announcement: Intelligence for GOOD

    This is the first episode of our new show Intelligence for GOOD. Subscribe here on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. In the inaugural episode of Intelligence for GOOD, I sit down with Andrew Sweet, Vice President of Innovation at The Rockefeller Foundation, to explore how AI is already being used to solve real-world challenges in agriculture, education, healthcare, workforce development, and public services. Andrew brings a unique perspective to the conversation. From serving as a Peace Corps volunteer in Togo and a presidential appointee at USAID, to leading global COVID-19 initiatives at The Rockefeller Foundation, his career has focused on tackling complex challenges at scale. The discussion also explores Rockefeller's remarkable connection to the origins of artificial intelligence. In 1955, the Foundation funded the Dartmouth Summer Research Project on Artificial Intelligence, the gathering where the term "artificial intelligence" was first coined and the modern AI field was born. Today, nearly seventy years later, Rockefeller is helping shape how AI can be deployed for public benefit around the world. In This Episode The untold history of The Rockefeller Foundation's role in the birth of artificial intelligenceHow AI is helping millions of smallholder farmers improve crop yields and livelihoodsWhy developing countries often have a more optimistic view of AI than the United StatesThe growing importance of AI sovereignty and locally owned AI infrastructureHow AI can expand access to public benefits and government servicesWhy AI literacy should become a core part of educationThe rise of solo entrepreneurs building businesses with AI toolsHow states like Maryland and West Virginia are preparing citizens for an AI-driven economyThe role philanthropy can play in ensuring AI benefits everyone, not just a small group of technology companiesWhy Andrew believes AI can help reduce inequality rather than increase itKey Takeaways AI is already creating measurable social impact. From Digital Green's Farmer.Chat platform reaching millions of farmers across multiple countries to new AI-powered health and education tools, practical applications are delivering results today. The biggest opportunity may be where talent is scarce. Rather than replacing workers, AI can fill critical gaps in sectors such as agriculture, healthcare, and education where there simply are not enough professionals available to meet demand. AI literacy is becoming essential. Just as previous generations needed proficiency in Microsoft Office and internet tools, future workers will need a working understanding of AI systems and how to collaborate with them effectively. Public services are ripe for transformation. AI has the potential to make government services more accessible, responsive, and human-centered by reducing complexity and improving citizen experiences. Optimism matters. While risks deserve serious attention, Andrew argues that society needs more conversations about the opportunities AI creates, especially for entrepreneurship, workforce development, and global problem solving. About Andrew Sweet Andrew Sweet is Vice President of Innovation at The Rockefeller Foundation, where he leads AI partnerships and strategy initiatives. Before joining Rockefeller, Andrew served as a presidential appointee at USAID, worked with Dalberg Advisors in Africa and the United States, and began his career as a Peace Corps volunteer in Togo, West Africa. His work today focuses on helping governments, nonprofits, and communities leverage emerging technologies to improve lives and create economic opportunity. ---------------------------------------- Disruptors for GOOD is powered by Causeartist, a nonprofit media company dedicated to bridging the gap between capital and culture by spotlighting founders, investors, and organizations reimagining how business can serve people and the planet. Through storytelling, events, and open-access education, Causeartist helps create a shared language of impact, inspiring more founders to build with purpose and more funders to invest with intention. By amplifying ideas and innovations across industries, Causeartist transforms awareness into action and cultivates a community where paying it forward is part of the foundation for growth.

    39 min
  2. 15 Jun ·  Bonus

    Causeartist Weekly Brief - From Rare Earths to Clean Water: The Startups Building the Next Impact Economy

    In This Episode • Climate tech investment reaches $40.5 billion in 2025 • Why investors remain bullish on clean energy, grid modernization, and industrial decarbonization • How Nimble is reducing electronic waste through circular consumer products • Phoenix Tailings' mission to build a cleaner domestic rare earth supply chain • Clear Robotics and the future of autonomous electric vessels for waterway management • The role of the Bezos Earth Fund in advancing climate and conservation efforts • How the UNICEF Venture Fund supports frontier technology startups in emerging markets • Finance Earth's approach to unlocking private capital for environmental solutions • Recent funding rounds from Clear Robotics, Campground, and Cocoon Carbon • New research showing AI is creating more technology jobs than it is eliminating across Europe Featured Organizations Companies: • Nimble• Phoenix Tailings• Clear Robotics Funders: • Bezos Earth Fund• UNICEF Venture Fund• Finance Earth Recent Funding Covered • Clear Robotics, $1.75M• Campground, $2.2M• Cocoon Carbon, $15M ---------------------------------------- Disruptors for GOOD is powered by Causeartist, a nonprofit media company dedicated to bridging the gap between capital and culture by spotlighting founders, investors, and organizations reimagining how business can serve people and the planet. Through storytelling, events, and open-access education, Causeartist helps create a shared language of impact, inspiring more founders to build with purpose and more funders to invest with intention. By amplifying ideas and innovations across industries, Causeartist transforms awareness into action and cultivates a community where paying it forward is part of the foundation for growth.

    7 min
  3. 9 Jun ·  Bonus

    New Report: AI Is Creating More Tech Jobs in Europe Than It's Eliminating

    A new Linux Foundation report shows AI is driving a net hiring effect of +27% across European tech organizations in 2026. The real barrier to AI value isn't the technology itself, t's the foundational readiness to deploy it safely. Key takeaways European organizations expect a +27% net hiring effect from AI in 2026, with smaller organizations trending most positive.Security concerns (51%) and skills gaps (44%) are the top barriers to realizing AI value -- not the technology itself.Organizations are 3.7x more likely to upskill existing staff than hire externally for AI and strategic tech roles.Open source is the leading strategy for AI implementation among European organizations, cited by 54% of respondents.The dominant narrative around AI and employment has been one of displacement. But a new report from the Linux Foundation and LF Research tells a more complicated story: in Europe, artificial intelligence is a net job creator, at least for now. The 2026 State of Tech Talent Europe report, surveyed European organizations across multiple sectors and found an aggregated net hiring effect of +27% expected in 2026, dropping to +17% in 2027. It's a solid signal that AI adoption is opening roles faster than it's closing them, at least at the organizational level. ---------------------------------------- Disruptors for GOOD is powered by Causeartist, a nonprofit media company dedicated to bridging the gap between capital and culture by spotlighting founders, investors, and organizations reimagining how business can serve people and the planet. Through storytelling, events, and open-access education, Causeartist helps create a shared language of impact, inspiring more founders to build with purpose and more funders to invest with intention. By amplifying ideas and innovations across industries, Causeartist transforms awareness into action and cultivates a community where paying it forward is part of the foundation for growth.

    9 min
  4. How Nest Is Building the Business Infrastructure the Global Artisan Economy Never Had

    28 May

    How Nest Is Building the Business Infrastructure the Global Artisan Economy Never Had

    Rebecca Van Bergen, founder of Nest, joins Causeartist to discuss 20 years of building business and financial infrastructure for artisan and maker economies across 123 countries. The conversation covers how Nest supports micro and small creative businesses, the structure of their accelerator programs, the Makers Future Fund in partnership with Etsy and Pinterest, and why the handmade economy may be more durable than most people assume. Guest Rebecca Van Bergen is the founder of Nest, a nonprofit organization that provides business development support, financing, and market access to artisan and maker businesses globally. Nest operates in 123 countries and supports over 4,000 micro and small businesses through its Artisan Guild, e-learning platform, and cohort-based accelerator programs. Topics Covered The founding of Nest in 2005 and its connection to the early microfinance movementWhy loans alone are insufficient without business education and market accessThe scale and data challenges of the global handcraft economyHow the Artisan Guild works and who it servesThe structure of Nest's business accelerators, including the sustainability-focused cohort and the UNHCR refugee artisan programWhy grants paired with education outperform education aloneThe Makers Future Fund: capital and financial literacy for US maker businessesHow Etsy and Pinterest contribute as funders and recruitment networksThe ripple effects of artisan income on women, families, and communitiesLessons from 20 years of running a nonprofit social enterpriseThe intrapreneurship opportunity inside large companiesWhy AI and automation may accelerate demand for handmade goodsKey Insights Financing is consistently the top need reported by guild members across every geography. The Makers Future Fund was built specifically to address that gap for US-based maker businesses who have no viable path to formal credit. Nest pairs every accelerator with a small business grant. Business advice without capital to act on it has limited value. The grant closes that gap. The artisan economy is extremely difficult to quantify because most transactions occur in the informal economy. That data gap has historically caused the sector to be dismissed as niche and non-scalable. Nest's network of 4,000 businesses is part of how the organization builds a more accurate macro picture. Rebecca's framework for social entrepreneurs: stop looking at the 20-year horizon. Look at your feet, do three concrete things today, and repeat. Twenty years of that compounds into real distance. As AI proliferates, Rebecca sees a counter-movement building. People increasingly want objects made by human hands. She expects the market to develop two coexisting extremes: robotically produced goods and deeply human handcraft. Both will persist. Organizations and Programs Mentioned Nest Artisan GuildNest Connect (e-learning platform)Makers Future FundMakers UnitedUNHCR refugee artisan accelerator programEtsyPinterestTargetNovica10,000 VillagesMuhammad Yunus / microfinance ---------------------------------------- Disruptors for GOOD is powered by Causeartist, a nonprofit media company dedicated to bridging the gap between capital and culture by spotlighting founders, investors, and organizations reimagining how business can serve people and the planet. Through storytelling, events, and open-access education, Causeartist helps create a shared language of impact, inspiring more founders to build with purpose and more funders to invest with intention. By amplifying ideas and innovations across industries, Causeartist transforms awareness into action and cultivates a community where paying it forward is part of the foundation for growth.

    24 min
  5. 27 May ·  Bonus

    A Causeartist Announcement

    Hey everyone, welcome back to the podcast. Today’s episode is a little different. After years of building Causeartist as a media platform spotlighting impact startups, founders, investors, and innovators, we’re entering a completely new chapter. Causeartist is now officially a nonprofit organization. And honestly, this decision came from something simple. The mission became bigger than a media company. Over the years, I’ve had the chance to interview incredible founders, nonprofit leaders, impact investors, climate innovators, technologists, artists, and builders from all over the world. And one thing became very clear to me. There are millions of people working every single day to solve massive problems in the world, but many of their stories never get told. A lot of these founders and organizations are building in areas like climate, education, healthcare, financial inclusion, food systems, AI for good, community development, and so much more. But many of them are doing this work without enough visibility, without enough media support, and without enough long-term storytelling infrastructure behind them. We want to help change that. The vision for Causeartist moving forward is to build a lasting home for the impact economy. A place focused on impact startup storytelling, founder and innovator interviews, educational media and research, ecosystem databases and directories, podcasts and live conversations, community collaboration, and resources for people building positive change in the world. At its core, Causeartist is built around one belief: There are millions of people using their talents, creativity, skills, and businesses to improve the world, and their stories deserve to be seen. That belief has guided this platform from day one. And now becoming a nonprofit allows us to think longer term. It allows us to focus on building something durable. Something mission-first. Something that can continue spotlighting innovators and builders for years and decades to come. I also just want to say thank you. Thank you to every founder who trusted us with their story. Every investor who shared insights. Every nonprofit leader, partner, listener, reader, and supporter who has been part of this journey. You helped shape what Causeartist has become. And honestly, we’re just getting started. I’m incredibly excited for what we’re building next. More stories. More founders. More conversations. More tools and resources for the people trying to create a better future. So thank you for being here. Thank you for believing in this mission. And let’s continue building together. See you in the next episode. ---------------------------------------- Disruptors for GOOD is powered by Causeartist, a nonprofit media company dedicated to bridging the gap between capital and culture by spotlighting founders, investors, and organizations reimagining how business can serve people and the planet. Through storytelling, events, and open-access education, Causeartist helps create a shared language of impact, inspiring more founders to build with purpose and more funders to invest with intention. By amplifying ideas and innovations across industries, Causeartist transforms awareness into action and cultivates a community where paying it forward is part of the foundation for growth.

    3 min
  6. How Givebutter Grew From a College Dorm to $9B in Donations - Max Friedman, CEO of Givebutter

    17 Mar

    How Givebutter Grew From a College Dorm to $9B in Donations - Max Friedman, CEO of Givebutter

    Max Friedman didn't set out to build one of the most widely used fundraising platforms in the nonprofit sector. He and his two co-founders, Ari Krasner and Leon Cohen, started with a simpler observation: the tools available for people who wanted to raise money for a cause were either expensive, hard to use, or both. And the fees were rarely transparent. That was 10 years ago. Today, Givebutter has processed nearly $10 billion in donations, acquired nonprofit media brand We Are For Good, launched financial products for nonprofits, and is pushing past 150 employees with plans to hit 200 by end of year. Friedman joined the Disruptors for Good podcast to talk about the journey, the hard stretches, and what the next decade looks like for Givebutter and the broader nonprofit tech space. ---------------------------------------- Disruptors for GOOD is powered by Causeartist, a nonprofit media company dedicated to bridging the gap between capital and culture by spotlighting founders, investors, and organizations reimagining how business can serve people and the planet. Through storytelling, events, and open-access education, Causeartist helps create a shared language of impact, inspiring more founders to build with purpose and more funders to invest with intention. By amplifying ideas and innovations across industries, Causeartist transforms awareness into action and cultivates a community where paying it forward is part of the foundation for growth.

    33 min
  7. 7 Mar ·  Bonus

    Grove Collaborative: Impact Business Case Study

    Grove Collaborative is one of the most ambitious experiments in mission-driven consumer commerce of the past decade. Founded in 2012, it started as a subscription delivery service for eco-friendly cleaning products and grew into a publicly traded company with a $1.5 billion peak valuation. Along the way, it became the world's first plastic-neutral retailer, earned B Corp certification, and pioneered transparency tools no other retailer in the category had attempted. Then it nearly fell apart. From 2022 onward, Grove faced declining revenue, a delisting threat, an executive overhaul, and the painful acknowledgment that its flagship environmental commitment, 100% plastic free by 2025 — would not be met. The company has spent the past two years rebuilding: operationally, financially, and strategically. This case study covers the full arc. The founding thesis, the growth decisions that worked, the ones that didn't, the financial turbulence after going public, and how Grove is attempting to rebuild as a leaner, more durable business without walking away from its core mission. Full Case Study ---------------------------------------- Disruptors for GOOD is powered by Causeartist, a nonprofit media company dedicated to bridging the gap between capital and culture by spotlighting founders, investors, and organizations reimagining how business can serve people and the planet. Through storytelling, events, and open-access education, Causeartist helps create a shared language of impact, inspiring more founders to build with purpose and more funders to invest with intention. By amplifying ideas and innovations across industries, Causeartist transforms awareness into action and cultivates a community where paying it forward is part of the foundation for growth.

    23 min

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About

Disruptors for GOOD is a podcast that showcases global social entrepreneurship and social enterprises committed to ethical fashion, impact investing, climate mitigation, sustainable travel, and businesses generating positive global impact. Through in-depth interviews, Grant Trahant, the founder of Causeartist, engages with innovative and impactful startups and brands worldwide.

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